Monday, January 12, 2009

Jaschik, Scott. "History Beyond the Nation-State." INSIDE HIGHER ED January 5, 2009.

When Matthew Connelly was looking at graduate schools, he knew that his application wouldn’t land naturally on any one historian’s pile to review. The departments, he said, were made up of “Americanists, Europeanists, and otherists.” Connelly, now an associate professor of history at Columbia University, was none of the above. He wanted to explore ideas related to Algeria’s independence from France, but didn’t want to be called a scholar only of French colonialism or only of North Africa, and he didn’t want to restrict himself to the power of governments and the military. The ideas associated with that revolt don’t belong just with one topic, he said Saturday at a session of the annual meeting of the American Historical Association. Connelly is a proponent of “transnational” history, a field that is still being defined. Some people have been doing it for a long time, and the name has been used for several years now. But in a sign that it is achieving a critical mass of scholars and putting down roots, the AHA held a session on “doing transnational history” in order to highlight both some of the promising work and the efforts to support scholars who do it. . . . Read the rest here: http://insidehighered.com/news/2009/01/05/transnational.

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